Middle East

"Blasphemous": Morocco bans British film on Prophet's daughter Fatimah

A still from "The Lady of Heaven". Source: Enlightened Kingdom

Morocco announced Saturday it had banned a British film about the daughter of the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH), which Muslims in a number of countries have denounced as blasphemous.

"The Lady of Heaven" will not receive a license to be shown in the country, the Moroccan Cinematographic Centre (CCM) said in a statement issued late Saturday.

The CCM ruling bans the film, directed by Eli King, from being screened on either a commercial or cultural basis in the country.

The drama is billed as the first film on the life of Prophet Muhammad's (PBUH) daughter Fatimah, and draws links between ISIS in the 21st century and historical figures in Sunni Islam.

The CCM's ruling comes hours after Morocco's Supreme Ulema Council, the kingdom's highest religious authority, firmly condemned the film in a statement Saturday.

In the statement, they said the film was a "flagrant falsification of the established facts of the history of Islam."

The film was released in Britain on June 3 but after protests outside cinemas, the world's second-largest cinema chain, Cineworld, cancelled all screenings.

Egypt, Pakistan, Iran, and Iraq are among the countries to have denounced the film as blasphemous.

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"Blasphemous": Morocco bans British film on Prophet's daughter Fatimah

A still from "The Lady of Heaven". Source: Enlightened Kingdom

Morocco announced Saturday it had banned a British film about the daughter of the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH), which Muslims in a number of countries have denounced as blasphemous.

"The Lady of Heaven" will not receive a license to be shown in the country, the Moroccan Cinematographic Centre (CCM) said in a statement issued late Saturday.

The CCM ruling bans the film, directed by Eli King, from being screened on either a commercial or cultural basis in the country.

The drama is billed as the first film on the life of Prophet Muhammad's (PBUH) daughter Fatimah, and draws links between ISIS in the 21st century and historical figures in Sunni Islam.

The CCM's ruling comes hours after Morocco's Supreme Ulema Council, the kingdom's highest religious authority, firmly condemned the film in a statement Saturday.

In the statement, they said the film was a "flagrant falsification of the established facts of the history of Islam."

The film was released in Britain on June 3 but after protests outside cinemas, the world's second-largest cinema chain, Cineworld, cancelled all screenings.

Egypt, Pakistan, Iran, and Iraq are among the countries to have denounced the film as blasphemous.

Comments

গুমের সঙ্গে শেখ হাসিনার সম্পৃক্ততা পেয়েছে কমিশন, র‍্যাব বিলুপ্তির সুপারিশ

‘আনফোল্ডিং দ্য ট্রুথ’ শিরোনামে জমা দেওয়া রিপোর্টে কমিশন সদস্যরা এখন পর্যন্ত পাওয়া এক হাজার ৬৭৬টি অভিযোগের মধ্যে ৭৫৮ জনের অভিযোগ যাচাই-বাছাই করেছেন।

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